LO! through a shadowy valley
March with measured step and tread
A long array of Phantoms wan
And pallid as the dead,-
The white and waxen dead!
With a crown on every head,
And a torch in every hand
To fright the sheeted ghosts away
That guard its portals night and day,
They seek the Shadow-Land.
On as the pale procession stalks,
The clouds around divide,
Raising themselves in giant shapes,
And gazing down in pride
On the spectres as they glide
Through the valley long and wide,-
On the spectres all so pale
In vestments whiter than the snow,
As through the dim defile they go
With melancholy wail.
On tramps the funeral file; and now
The weeping ones have passed,
A throng succeeding, loftier
And statelier than the last,-
The Monarchs of the Past!
And upon the solemn blast,
Wave their plumes and pennons high,
And loud their mournful marches sweep
Up from the valley dark and deep
To the over-arching sky.
And now the Cycle-buried years
Stride on in stern array:
Before each band the Centuries,
With beards of silver gray,
The Marshals of the Day,
In silence pass away;
And behind them come the Hours
And Minutes, who, as on they go,
Are swinging steadily to and fro
The incense round in showers.
Behold the bier,-the ebony bier,-
On sinewy shoulders borne,
Of many a dim, forgotten Year
From Primal Times forlorn.
All weary and all worn,
With their ancient garments torn
And their beards as white as Lear’s,
Lo! how they tremble as they tread,
Mourning above the marble dead,
In agonies of tears!
How very wan the old man looks!
As wasted and as pale
As some dim ghost of shadowy days
In legendary tale.
God give the sleeper hail!
And the world hath much to wail
That his ears no more may hear;
For, with his palms across his breast,
He lieth in eternal rest
Along his stately bier.
How thin his hair! How white his beard!
How waxen-like his hands,
Which nevermore may turn the glass
That on his bosom stands,-
The glass whose solemn sands
Were won from Stygian strands!
For his weary work is done,
And he has reaped his latest field,
And none that scythe of his can wield
‘Neath the dim, descending sun.
At last they reach the Shadow-Land,
And with an eldritch cry
The guardian ghost sweeps wailingly
Athwart the troubled sky,
Like meteors flashing by,
As asunder crashing fly,
With a wild and clangorous din,
The gates before the funeral train,
Filing along the dreary plain
And marching slowly in.
Lo! ‘t is a temple! and around
Tall ebony columns rise
Up from the withering earth, and bear
Aloft the shrivelling skies,
Where the tempest trembling sighs,
And the ghostly moonlight dies
‘Neath a lurid comet’s glare,
That over the mourners’ plum
(Henry Beck Hirst)
More Poetry from Henry Beck Hirst:
Henry Beck Hirst Poems based on Topics: Pride, Man, Silence, Snow, Eternity, Ghost, Mourning, Past, Hair, God, SadnessReaders Who Like This Poem Also Like:
Based on Topics: Man Poems, God Poems, World Poems, Sadness Poems, Past Poems, Work & Career Poems, Hair Poems, Pride Poems, Silence Poems, Snow Poems, Eternity PoemsBased on Keywords: marshals, shrivelling, clangorous, shadow-land, over-arching
- Book III - Part 03 - The Soul is Mortal (Lucretius Poems)
- The Golden Legend: VI. The School Of Salerno (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Poems)
- Of The Nature Of Things: Book II - Part 03 - Atomic Forms And Their Combinations (Lucretius Poems)
- The Celt's Paradise. Third Duan (John Banim Poems)
- Of The Nature Of Things: Book V - Part 04 - Formation Of The World (Lucretius Poems)